An emergency fund is money set aside specifically for unexpected expenses — job loss, car breakdown, medical costs, major home repairs. It's the financial cushion that prevents a bad month from turning into a debt spiral. Here's exactly how much you need, where to keep it, and how to build it on a Canadian income.
Keep your emergency fund in a KOHO savings goal — it earns interest and is separate from your spending money. Use code 45ET55JSYA for a sign-up bonus.
Get KOHO Free — Use Code 45ET55JSYAThe standard recommendation is 3–6 months of essential living expenses in an easily accessible account. Essential expenses means: rent/mortgage, groceries, utilities, transportation, minimum debt payments, and insurance. It does not include discretionary spending.
| Situation | Recommended Coverage |
|---|---|
| Single income, stable government or large-employer job | 3 months |
| Dual income household | 3 months |
| Single income, private sector | 4–5 months |
| Self-employed or freelance income | 6 months minimum |
| Variable income, commission-based | 6+ months |
| Single parent | 6 months |
Employment Insurance (EI) provides partial income replacement if you lose your job — typically 55% of insurable earnings up to a weekly maximum (~$668/week in 2025). There is a waiting period of approximately one week before benefits begin, and benefits usually take 2–4 weeks to arrive after application. EI does not replace a full emergency fund, but it does reduce how much you personally need to save for job loss scenarios.
For Canadians with stable employment, this means 3 months of expenses is a reasonable starting target. For self-employed Canadians (who do not pay into EI and cannot claim it), 6 months is the minimum.
Your emergency fund needs to be:
Do not keep your emergency fund in a GIC or invested in stocks/ETFs. GICs are locked in; investments can lose value exactly when you need the money most.
Yes — and for most Canadians, keeping the emergency fund inside a TFSA High-Interest Savings Account is ideal. The interest earned is tax-free, the money is accessible without penalties, and any withdrawals create new TFSA contribution room the following year. Just make sure to use a savings account product within the TFSA, not an invested TFSA that could drop in value.
An emergency fund is not optional. It is the foundation of every other financial goal. Without it, any unexpected expense goes on a credit card and undermines your debt payoff, investment, and savings progress. Build $1,000 first, then grow to 3–6 months of expenses. Keep it at EQ Bank or in a KOHO savings goal where it earns interest while it waits.